Showing ordinances that apply to Springfield, NJ
Springfield is an unincorporated community (population 1,518) in Union County, New Jersey. Because Springfield is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Union County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The garage sale permits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Most Union County municipalities require free or low-cost garage sale permits. Elizabeth Chapter 5.44 requires permit from City Clerk, no fee, limit 2 sales per year. Westfield permits through Town Clerk, $5 fee. Summit requires free permit. Cranford and Scotch Plains require registration. Plainfield free permit through Clerk. Permits enforce signage and frequency limits. Religious and charitable sales may be exempt. Items must be personal property, not commercially purchased for resale.
Garage and yard sale regulation across Union County is administered municipally with generally modest permit requirements. Elizabeth Revised Ordinances Chapter 5.44 requires a free permit from the City Clerk's office; residents are limited to 2 sales per calendar year of up to 3 consecutive days each. Westfield Code ยง11-14 requires a permit through the Town Clerk with a $5 administrative fee, limit 2 sales per year. Summit Code Chapter 155 requires free permit through Municipal Clerk, 2 sales per year. Cranford Code ยง4-13 requires registration (free) with Town Clerk, limit 2 sales per year of 2 consecutive days each. Scotch Plains Township Code similarly requires permit. Plainfield requires free permit through City Clerk. Linden Code ยง72 requires permit with small fee. Roselle, Rahway, and Union Township operate similar permit systems. Religious organizations, schools, and charitable nonprofits are typically exempt from permit requirements or fall under separate charitable sale provisions. Items offered must be personal property; commercial retail sales from a residence require home business zoning approval. Multi-family or neighborhood-wide sales (block sales) may be permitted as a single event with one permit if coordinated. Estate sales following a death or house sale are typically handled under estate sale-specific provisions and may not count toward the annual limit.
Elizabeth operating without permit: $50-$250 per occurrence plus cease-and-desist. Westfield unpermitted: $100 fine. Exceeding frequency limits: $100-$500 plus potential home business zoning violation. Commercial retail without home business permit: $250-$1,000.
See how Springfield's garage sale permits rules stack up against other locations.
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